Say More

Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley reveal the real surprise in 'Hamnet'

Can you guess which scene has some sharp reality to it?
 By   and 
Shannon Connellan
 on 
Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley laughing during the content day for 'Hamnet'
Watch Next

On Mashable's Say More, hosts Kristy Puchko (Mashable's Entertainment Editor) and Mark Stetson (Senior Creative Producer) bring humor and their trusted insights to the biggest shows, films, digital trends, and cultural moments. From viral-worthy rants and passionate raves to smart recaps and first-look teasers, they cover what everyone is talking about. Celebrity guests join the conversation for real talk about their careers, upcoming projects, and what’s trending online.

New episodes every Friday.


Great love can echo across centuries. This seems to be the heart-wrenching truth of Hamnet, the latest film from Academy Award-winning director Chloé Zhao. Adapted from Maggie O'Farrell's novel of the same name, Hamnet unfolds the little known story of William Shakespeare, his wife, and the love that saw them through times of joy and agony. Beyond that, this critically heralded drama — starring Academy Award nominees Paul Mescal and Jessie Buckley — reveals how their story went on to inform one of Shakespeare's most well-known tragedies, Hamlet.

Mashable's UK Editor Shannon Connellan sat down with Hamnet stars Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal to delve into what it meant to make a movie with such rich history and profound emotion. For starters, she asked Mescal what it was like to tackle the always intimidating "To be or not to be" soliloquy.

Mescal admitted this scene caused him "great anxiety," expanding that "to be Shakespeare but also say Shakespeare and also say that speech, that was always one of the big, more technical challenges." Hamnet gave the acclaimed actor new understanding of Shakespeare's writing. "Whenever I've approached Shakespeare before, it's like this sacred text. And to me, subjectively playing Shakespeare within [Hamnet]," he explained, "Oh no. These are words that have cost parts of his life to write. They're not words on a page. They come from him. So there's a slight freedom in that, where I leant into that so I felt like I could survive the spiders in my mind when I was speaking it all. So I feel very proud of that."

For her part, Buckley plays Agnes true of O'Farrell's novel, a woman who is "too wild for any man." She reveled in the part, telling Mashable, "She's elemental. Every ounce of her is full. And she has such a kind of uncompromising sense of herself and who she is."

But of course, Hamnet is about more than Agnes and Will. Asked about performing with the three children who play the Shakespeare brood, Mescal revealed that he, Jacobi Jupe, Olivia Lynes, and Bodhi Rae Breathnach cleverly conspired to prepare a scene in which their characters surprise Agnes with a bit of Macbeth — specifically, the witches' entrance. "We didn't let Jessie know that we were gonna do that," Mescal said, "So that was an actual surprise. I'd rehearsed the kids...so that shot on Jessie — "

"It was real," Buckley said, picking up the sentence before praising Jupe's terrific performance as a deeply committed witch. The stars treasured their time on the film and playing family. And you see the cinematic magic of this in Hamnet, which is now playing in select theaters. A wide theatrical release will follow on Dec. 12.

Topics Film

A photo portrait of a journalist with blonde hair and a band t-shirt.
Shannon Connellan
Senior Editor

Shannon Connellan is Mashable's Senior Editor, General Assignments, based in London. She has been Mashable's UK Editor (and still manages the illustrious UK team) and Australia Editor, but emotionally, she lives searching for Exit 8. A Tomatometer-approved critic, Shannon writes about entertainment, tech, social good, science, culture, and Australian horror, and loves to nerd out with movie stars, filmmakers, and TV creators.


More from Say More
Patton Oswalt opens up about the moments that defined his career
By Mark Stetson and Warren Shaw
Patton Oswalt on the Say More couch talking about his new comedy album, "Black Coffee and Ice Water."

Which Critical Role campaign is funniest? The cast weighs in.
The cast of Critical Role in the Mashable studio. (Matthew Mercer, Marisha Ray, Travis Willingham, Ashley Johnson, Sam Riegel,  Laura Bailey, Liam O'Brien, and Taliesin Jaffe)

'The Testaments' cast react to the Season 1 finale, including that Margaret Atwood cameo
"The Testaments' Rowan Banchard, Lucy Halliday and Mattea Conforti on the Say More couch

Andrew Scott and Brendan Fraser talk 'Pressure' and competency porn
Brendan Fraser and Andrew Scott talk to Kristy Puchko at the content day for Pressure

Josh Johnson’s formula for the perfect comedy special
Josh Johnson joins Mashable on the Say More couch to talk his new special, Symphony

Latest Videos
What are the Backrooms and why are they so captivating?
The Backrooms A24 Film

We tried 6 killer Acer laptops from Computex: Hyperlights, 18-inch beasts, and everything between!
Acer, laptops, computex


Embarrassing Gmail Name? You Can Now Change It
gmail, email

Watch 'House of the Dragon' stars recap Season 2
A blonde woman sits in a chair facing the camera.

Jimmy Kimmel gleefully roasts Trump over record low approval rating
A man in a suit stands on a talk show stage. The caption reads, "He has the same approval rating as 'Paul Blart: Mall Cop.'"

'The Testaments' cast react to the Season 1 finale, including that Margaret Atwood cameo
"The Testaments' Rowan Banchard, Lucy Halliday and Mattea Conforti on the Say More couch


Behind the scenes of Disney’s newest high-tech ride updates
disney, muppet, tomorrowland

Jimmy Kimmel responds to Fox attacking his Instagram post
A man in a suit stands on a talk show stage. The caption reads, "Trump raided that network to fill his cabinet positions and now there's nobody left to be on it."

Gen Z men are more religious online
Christianna Silva and Judith Butler in front of the American Flag
The biggest stories of the day delivered to your inbox.
These newsletters may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. By clicking Subscribe, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Thanks for signing up. See you at your inbox!